Configuring Macintosh-accessible volumes
Applies To: Windows Server 2003, Windows Server 2003 R2, Windows Server 2003 with SP1, Windows Server 2003 with SP2
Configuring Macintosh-accessible volumes
With the Windows Server 2003 family, you can share folders on the server in any combination. For example, you can share a single folder twice with two different share names, and you can share a folder with one share name and then share a subfolder of that folder with another share name.
However, different rules apply when you use Services for Macintosh to configure Macintosh-accessible volumes. You cannot configure two folders in the same folder tree as volumes.
This means that, when configuring Macintosh-accessible volumes, you cannot configure:
A single folder twice as two different volumes.
A folder as a volume if it exists anywhere in the folder tree under another folder configured as a volume.
A folder as a volume if one of its subfolders, or any subfolder of one of its subfolders, is configured as a volume.
All Macintosh-accessible volumes must be on an NTFS partition or a Compact Disc File System (CDFS) volume. (The CDFS volumes are read-only.) The number of volumes visible to the user is determined by the length of the volume names, which must all fit in a buffer in order to be displayed. (The size of the buffer is determined by an underlying AppleTalk Protocol.) Volume names can have a maximum of 27 characters. Try to strike a balance between clearly naming volumes so that users can identify them easily and keeping the names short so that all of the volume names can be displayed.
Note
Use this formula to determine the number of Macintosh-accessible volume names that can be displayed:
N * (M**+2**) <=4624
where N is the number of volumes and M is the average length of the names in bytes.